The Hugo Daily News (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 236, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 3, 1959 Page: 5 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
K- $ V V' 4'
"r -
P
til
I
i
741""" 07—–wr(T71
' ' ' - ' 'r 3 4 1 t i 'II 1 ( 0L'' 'it
i'kt
1 V A t 4 :A' buAI TJ
(7
:' IftiA'& tr---611414-7 L
01401 -4 -w -
-47 4 --- k
Oscar Robertson Heads UPI's All
America Team With 336 Averdrie
NEW YORK -- (UPI) — Oscar
Robertson of Cincinnati whop
336-point scoring average repre-
sents only a small part of his var-
ied basketball talents led the vot-
ing today for the 1959 United Press
International (All-America) team
with a record popularity
' Named with Robertson by the
direct vote of 290 sports writers
and tadlo TV broadcasters
throughout the nation were: Bail-
ey Howell of Mississippi State
Bob Boozer of Kansas State Jerry
West of West Virginia and little
Don Hennon of Pittsburgh Robert-
son and Hennon are repeaters
from last year's team
The 6-foot-5 Robertson current-
- ly leading the nation in scoring
for the second consecutive season
- received a total of 279 first-team
votes three for second and was
passed up on only eight baBots
He thus w a s named on an all-
time high of 972 per cent of the
votes cast topping the old record
popularity of 969 attracted by Wilt
Chamberlain of Kansas last season
Howell Second Highest
Howell the 6-foot-7 center w h o
led Mississippi State to the South-
eastern Conference championship
' was the second highest vote-getter
Ile was a first or second team
choice of 91 per cent of the voters
Boozer polled 769 per cent West
731 per cent and Hermon 672 per
cent
Howell Boozer and Ilennon are
seniors Robertson and West are
juniors with another season of eli-
gibility remaining to amass col-
lege and likely Oiympie glory as
well as setting themselves up for
lucrative professional offers
Hennon the 5-foot-9 mite w h o
averaged 257 points during a dis-
mal Pitt season w o n the fifth
position on the mythical team by
an extremely narrow vote over
Johnny Cox of Kentucky Hennon
had 126 first-team votes and 69
for second Cox received 103
votes for the first team and 69 for
seetrul
Beitutitully-Balanced Team
Por an all-star group chosen in
ti wide-open bsliot this year's All-
America is a beautifully-balanced
team Howell and the Boozer ar?
tJie ig-rnen with the deft inside
acorint:touch Robertson a n d
Westwre medium-sized terrors who
can shoot from all angles and
Hermon is
-- the speedy little "gunner" w h o
causes opposing team fits with his
driving and deadly showing
Cox headed t h e second team
that also was made up of Johnny
Green of Michigan State T o m
Hawkins ef Notre Dame Leo Byrd
of Marshall (the nation's second-
highest major college scorer) and
Seiden of St John's (NY)
A third team was comprised of
Walt Torrence of UCLA Bob
Ferry of St Louis Doug Smart
of Washington Char!ie Brown of
Seattle and Lou Pucillo of North
Carolina State
Once again the SouthweFt and
the Rocky Mountain areas were
abut out of berths on the first
three teams The Southwest's top
vote-getter was 11 E Kirchner of
Texas Christian and the Rockies'
was Tony Windis of Wyoming
' The 1959 United Press Interna-
tional MI America basketball
t e a m showing player school
height hometown and average:
First Team
Oscar Robertson Cincinnati 6-5
Feb 28 to March 7 National 4-H Week
176 Salute this Great Organization
whose PLEDGE is
1 My Head to clearer
thinking
6:7120 2 My Heart to greater
loyalty
020 3 My Hands to larger
service
4 My 'Health to better
living for my club my community and
- -
living for my club my
my country
Whose AIM is
Better Homemaking
Better Farming
Better & Happier living
r
cost on gas Highest resale too Enjoy COMPLETE LINE OF 0 IF ICE SUPPLIES
k
a - " ' f- t - s04d4o moor 0 at plontha
I
' '''' '' ik- I Personalized Comfort: individual Bei Lon I
f A r-7'4fs4----"- ' 51635
4 It n n Ito xat o an at 1
sofa front seats See your Rambler dealcr 4 V- - ' ' - s'' -- '''' ' '' I -1"P-If TYPEWRITERS ADDING t4DIAuCrHLIINcAETS0aCsALOCLIF IAicTEORFSu
K
ftw ' ) II ---11f-aake p 11411 IN tPt WM W44
cALIL momlmwmEnwmgiowmmommo- -I'ls1TU E
411Mr°RGR
110111010111
APHS CASH REGISTER
f I P
F'-cse Loan 71actiole V1 de Yonrs 1 Cultt: IZ(Tre1
e nee Pck up and De tyty
Deposits Insured 21290' paid on sayings DAGSETT ILOTOR Co 125 W Jockszit I
Rental ' achint a
'
I '
Deposits Insured
Indianapolis 336
Balicy Haweil Mississippi State
6-7 Tiliddleton Tenn 275
Bob Boozer Kansas State 6-8
Omaha Neb 253
Jerry West West Virginia 6-3
Catlin Creek W Va 256
Don Hennon Pittsburgh 5 9
Wampun Pa 257
Second Team
Tom Hawkins Notre Dame
Johnny Cox Kentucky
Johnny Green Michigan State
Leo Byrd Marshall
Al Seiden St Johu's (NY)
Third Tam
Walt Torrence UCLA
Bob Ferry St Louis
Doug Smart Washington
Charlie Brown &tittle
Lou Pudic) North Carena
State
Casey Stengel
Frank Lane Are
Feuding Again
ST PETERSBURG Fla (UPI)
— Casey Stengel who doesn't get
bitter very often blasted Frank
Lane today and accused him
among other things of trying to
run the other blows' ball clubs
It's no secret that the feud be-
tween t h e Yankee manager and
the general manager of the In-
dians is not merely frr newspaper
headlines The ill feeling between
them cropped up again after Lane
had attended a Yankee workout
before heading to Arizona where
his own club trains
"I let him have the run of the
place" Stengel complained
"Then he tries to run my ball
club What's more he makes me
look bad to my writers"
Casey explained that he stayed
in the outfield while Lane was at
the park "so he could have the
run of the dugout"
"I gave him four hours with my
players and my writers and didn't
say a thing against him I just
shook hands Then I find out that
he says I ain't funning the Yan-
kees right
"Weil how many games has he
won? llow many pennants h a s he
won? Where does he get off say-
ing 'This my Stengel ain't so
hot' "
Stengel w Apecialy bitter
!Yentise Lane "raps players afer
he trades them"
He was referring to two pitch-
ers—Don MO5Si and Ray Narleski
—who were traded to Detroit
rEnVi'E TOURNEY STARTS
FT EUSTIS Va — (LTI) —
The 2n4 Army basketball tou"na-
mant gets underway March 16 with
15 service teams from seven states
entered for the week-long compe-
tition Defending champion Ft
Kam( (Ky) is the pre-tourney fa-
vorite NATIONAL AMATEUR SET
PALM BEACH Fla — (UPI)—
The 1960 national amateur mixed
foursomes gold championshins
will be lied Feb 9-18 at the Com
try Club of Florida in De:ray
Beach it was announced today by
tourn ment chairman John E
McAuliffe
212 paid on sayings
11
4A1'-
fft
ANKING
ie r EVIL"(
NEED
rA0Mg1Agrowirowr00m1
- '
s'' - : : t
' ' !
e : '
- -
—ks "
i
:'
) '7 -
t 0 t '
s
EASY TRIP—Marcel Pronovost of the Detroit Red Wings
didn't like the idea of the Rangers' Jim Barth L getting
ahead of him in chase for a loose puck So a flick of Marcel's
stick and Bartlett was sent leeward
bmoromw
NEW YORK — (UPI) — National
League fact sheet spring edition:
The Milwaukee Braves held up
as pennant favorites even after
Red Schoendienst was lost for the
season — Third straight flag
should come tougher though in
a tighter league — Cincinnati
strengthened with addition of s!ug-
ging Frank Thomas and Dodgers
don't figure for seventh in their
second I-os ArIrdeS campaign
Warren Spahn of the Braves
with nine seasons at 20 or more
victorigs also is eighth on the
all time list of shut-out artifFts
with 43 for his career —Carl-
ton Willey of the Braves led the
league with four shutouts last
year a n d he missed a while
month with a r in troubie — Lew
Burdette third "hig Brave" led
the league in control — allowed
only 164 Walks per nine inning
game over the long haul
Hank Aaron and Eddie Mathews
rif the Braves Ernie Banks of
he Cubs and Dick Stuart of the
Pirates hit 19:3 honLrs ill all
-ight National 'cape park s—
Stuart's feat w a s amaz'ng
tame up tat played in only 67
games
- Pdt1 Farm System
Da !ger3 and Carilir Is are !ied
frin clubs" in t h e
!eague (1'2) liu! Los Angeles owns
the most — Sroltane 'Montreal S
Paul Macon Ga Cr andl
—Cards oTn Omaha club have
werk:ng agreenhnts will 11 oth
Sn'cr and rocke Lary
:berry of Los Angees bek Mcy-r
or the ihUie Bob Miler of
the Cara1in:11s and Bob Will of the
Cubs are the only National
Leaguers on the rasters of c'ubs
in tie rWes they were born in
— TI- R e (I s couldn't find a lo-
cal bny but ploched p7a:ers from
such roiels as Ftrawlacery Plains
Tenn M-tvioketa Iowa Wal-
milport Pa ' Moosup Conn and
W Va
Frnle Banks slugging Cub is
the league's hig honor m a n —
Won Most Voluabe Pl3yer award
by wide margin led in homers
(47) runs-batted-in (129) total
bases (379 and slugging percent-
age (614) And he also was the
only player in the league to parti-
cipate in all his cub's 154 games
Hodges Pads Lead
Gil Hodges of the Dodgers de-
spite his mnntal distress about
)
tr:
ri 1041o-04
4'' 7'(011 !:
'': ': ''' : 4 I
V - 004
v 4 1r
4 4 - -
-144' 0 -7 )
1 Steve Balder '
--
'S914 -'1 cars too high in price? too hungry for gas?
: - 0
-------- - ‘)
--a---1--yre-z( -- -- -'-'-'7H- )crtr41
--:- e t - r -
Ill - z 4 i:
: ritqr- fl -- -: 1 -
I '
::jL
-fr---'-” s3SbS i
2A F
2:-2z:i st 2a
ir i Iii4 i I I 1 P 1 p4 : - - ‘' i ri-L- i
11 0 ir " 1 :all I a4 i Igr1:fii17'-ftflifi-11311ik(A1114'lliii?f
tf
- -- t-- -- 4 '
-Awkat000domaratat166- Trar044 33 ' ' 4 P - - '' e
-7—p I f o'':' 4 V' it ( 1 ' 1" '" '-7- 1
a 1 rk:v 1 51-‘V 4177 -":11"r4-'-'-'4s'-7 --: '"4 ' ' 'r' ' - '
- '" :'-4f - ft' A ' 1ir 5 '1 31) P !!7-1:-'''''''s :' '" ''''I ''''f''''''''':A rr-'''r --7 S ''' '- i
I
- - ' ''--1 1 i'- "7 t-t"431 1 $ I --' f t' 3 ''': kt
1
4
1Ittt Tat' t -f" 3:3-4' 440 g 3t' -4' 3 13 h——rh -
J
-
In f7917 :77 nememomm6 r 060ooliatoonMMEIgri010111worlr! - ' ' o
' C 4":'''! daThi41'i:4 : '' 1414
' 73:stwc‘014644000-- :t io'lr--t i -- 1- — '
- -' ' :Vt qua-nt
vp "Th '''' t r
40401N "::-47: 1" - I T t'
---''''r----!:------k‘5---:' --- r: 41 :-: - :-- -- : ' d- e'- 71
-
24F-- - rt-F- '-'!:' k 1 -- :7 7 g ''
341
- ' 1'''P
Get the quality ear with built-in savings— New 100-inch
Rambler '59 Save more than ever on first
cost on gas Highest resale too Enjoy
Personalized Comfort: individual se( tional '
sofa front seats See your Rambler dealcr -
matizeu uorntort: individual sectional Z
front seats See your Rambler dealcr
DAGriLIT I 125 VI 125 W
The
5PonTs PATROL
By STEVE SNIDER
shooting for the short left field
fence is Los Angeles h i t one
grand slammer last year and
lengthened his lead in the all-
time list — Gil n o w has 14 with
the bases loaded — Ralph Kin-
or and Rogers Hornsby are tied
for second with 12 during their ca-
reers Cubs led 'the league with 132
honutrs but hit no grand slams
— Reds figure Frank Thomas
obtained from Pittsburgh should
up his 19:i8 home run output of
35 because his target at Cincin-
nati is beiter — Le f t field ferleC
in Cincy is 37 feet closer than
lull field wall at Pittsburgh
In one respect at least Sam
struck cut 25 hitters last year
topping Dean's old club record of
Et9 set ill '33 — Don Elston of
the Cubs finished 69 games for
the "workhorse" title of the year
but Bob Friend of the Pirates
aarted the most — 33
Therz's no doubt Etan Musial is
h t! kst "cr:reer" !tiler in the
tengue with a lifetime average of
310 — The wotst is pitcher Clem
Lane of the Dodgers — In 357
Lzibine has matle exactly
13 hits in his Mile years for 078
Lorimer&
rr !
::! R
Lir
Pcsiponzd
NEW YORE — (UPI) — Bahl-
irorels late but lusty bid for the
Pattpron-Inermar Johans-
Ain hcavywilght title fight h a s
-CS!'0011(!1 selection of the site to
March 10
Promoter Bill RoFensohn origi-
oilly had planned to name the
'Ieht-city Wednesday
But Baltimore's apparent will-
idgness to meet the cash guaran-
tee of any other city-8300000 —
and to make available its huge
Municipal Stadium seating 80000
for a fight caused him to delay
the site seleedon
Roscnsolin will attend a meeting
of more than 100 Maryland civic
and business leaders at Baltimore
Thursday to hear their detailed of
riN 1
!ITU t es iJe
'' 4 ! Ill!' 70 tt
t!!' ' It
A
w
Py TIM VO'llARTY
(Uni ed Press International)
The 1ilvatilsee Bray( s
fo up with Gene Conley
nre gl'irg ready lc trade
s-r pit(her l() thc first
I) idder
Till so facts became c idynt
oItiy ‘v h n Tebbetts
xecutive vice president of I h e
l'raves rvealvd the Natonal
Leagde eh nplonq have given up
h4e of luring Conley away fram
he Bosom C( hies before thc
(Jose of the season
-Conley feels he Owes an obli
iliett to th Celtics" Tebbeits
:dd upon h:s arrival at the
trai headoolartrs at
'I asked him if
t euti male any if'rence how
!Mit h miiiity we offered h I in and
he said 'no' lie is determined to
the basketball season na
matter what"
Tebbetts then pointed out t ha t
Conley has averaged $22500 a
year for five scars with the
Braves
-"If he feels that by leaving the
Celtics he would jeopardize his
obligation to them then he must
feel he has no obligation to us'
Birdie added
Wintess Last Season
Conley hampered by arm trou-
ble didn't win a game for t h e
Braves last season The 6-foot 8
former Washington State basket-
ball star joined the Celtics short-
ly after the elan of the current
National Basketball Association
campaign and has bet-n averag-
ing less than five points a game
- If the Braves are serious about
peddling lean Gene the Boston
Red Sox undoubtedly would grab
him if yvaivers could Le obtained
Amu all National Lerieue teams
Conley made h i s major league
debut with tile oid Boston Braves
in '92 and has a large blowing
among New England fans
The B ayes filially signed catch-
er Del Rice and infiehler Casey
Wise 3ionday but still have three
htedetets in their ranks In addi-
tion to Cimicy they are relief pit-
chQr Don McMahon and first base-
man Joe Adcock
The Washineein Senators' ho41-
out list was 'educed to four play-
ei s Alien eutfielders Aline Pear-
son and Jim Lemon came to
) LerMS Peareon the Iti58 Bookieof-the
Year in the American
League re ertinily settled fir
$110O3 IN hile Leinon will receive
$14040 Stil unsigned are le o y
Sievers Jim Deising Pedro Ra-
mos and Jose Vaviieitiso
Loes En Js Hol000t
Biliy 1os ended his holdout
with the Baltimore Orioles and
promptly askea to be traded to
another club The temperamental
eignteianaer reperteniy acctptcd a
Si9C00 contract a I tor being
iirea'ened with a 15 per cent cut
to $173W
On titner training froets: Come-
back pi'vhers Herb Score and
Mike Garcia oppose each other
oaay in a CiLveland Indians in:A-a-squad
ga me Pi chpis 11 e r m
Whemier end BO Hoeft of the
Tigers turned up win sure arms
The hitting of Cletis Boyer a n d
rookie Rod Kanehl fNitured a Yan-
kee intra-equitd game
Don Neecombe impressed C i n-
cinnati Manager Mayo Smith by
eliciting batt'ng practice Ur 30
minuter Billy Harrell collected
three straleht shelf's in a Cardi-
nal camp game Bob Lillis a n d
John Roseboro colected tripes in
a Dodger intra-squad contest Bob
Shaw developed the first sore
arm in the Wh!te Sox camp
Home runs by Bill Tuttle a n d
rookie NMI Totnay were the big
blows in the Athletics' first intra-
squad game I
ler Th2 City Council there al-
ready has passed a resolution in-
viting him to bring in the fight
'167'7'
wheeltase RAMBLER AMER:CAN
$185
eP
7 A P-n-'2
ttnt n aa an at -u
: - -
sor0A
Inns 114111
TODAPS
NE-' yonN — (uP1) Lice fHr
halt onte Aihky Cooper is a mat-
ter ut love----on or off the c o u r 1
atti p:Irtru'arly where it coaerns
tho ktsebalt 1twirs
Coopor is the 22yearold k
ttis-
tra tan dm actepttAl a S100c0)
pm taer aft r vinniett the Aus-
tratian NVItnbldon and US Ama-
'cor tn:s thamnionhioi las!
Coopor is the 22yearold k
tus- when cookmg oreIIst
tra ian who acceptd $100(0) "Tenms r just th
ofor aftr vinnirg the Aus- same to her as mho! veep!o Wise
Windildon and FS Ama- A's say peki Iti r Lu i "
'eur ton:s championship Iasi e it
cA iwst stop N ili a rac!et were the lovo of ILI- 1 t Na'urat-
s t-utuire Gad( n On Sun- y I ha to sce
aftrticon So hard was C op r iitttfl th:t
BM meanwlal‘ love is WW1- t ii:id ii AIL' been
&Cul I in Flattnish if he e er al!a n
First kvith his beautiful young WOUld have hmdied a tt'llnS
bride Iielen a former Miss Aus- racket or been plyio! young Mal
trala Second with the lucrative Ande'soa to the Garden a few
pro grame in which he picked up klays hence While hi is a decoke
$1400 last week in five matches if Australian feothall too finan-
Tneo there are the Dodgers eially he is doing hetLr at t h e
"I've always been interested in moment than il he had turned out
a I kinds of sports but now I am to be a Dodger oultie!der
I Dodger rooUr" he says Because in adhtion to the MO-
Meets 1)3dger Fan 000 he received f o r turning pro
It all stniS from his trip to the son Of a Me bourne school
Fore0 Dills for the US Nationals Lacher also is swinging for $6e0
I94 when he was one of Ails- top pi izk every one of the 60 itlys
traha's milk-fed boy NNondors he goes on the court in this cur-
"Our group rented a house near rent tour against either Pancho
Forest 11111s" smiles the Gregory j Gonzales Lew iload at Anderson
Peek of the stringed middle "'rile If he lost every match he'd still
trala Second with the lucrative
pro grame in which he picked up
$1400 last week in five matches
Teo there are the Dodgers
"I've always been interested in
a I kinds of sports but now I am
Dtatg('r rootor" he says
Meets D3dger Fan
It all stniS from his trip to
Fore0 Dills for the US Nationals
I94 when he was one of Ails-
tralia's milk-fed boy vonders
"Our group rented a house near
Forest Dills" smiles the Gregory
Peck of the stringed paddle "The
lady who kept house for us mak-
—
loday's Sports Parade
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Presi-
dents of two Ivy League schools
put the blast this week on col-
leges awarding athletic scholar-
ships but shed no tears for t h e
"pure" old Ivies
Even without acknowlelged
athletic grants they do a pretty
fair job of grabbing off athletes
as any other college recruiter will
tell you
"They have plenty of other
scholarships available" accord-
ing to one who lines up athletic
talent for a main' college outside
the Ivy group "And when they
dangle names like Yale Harvard
or Princeton before the eyes of
some bright kid who happens to
be a fine football playa we're
licked"
There's no such thing as a com-
pletely "free ride" — without a
loan or a job or both — in the
Ivy League But one estimate in-
dicates at least 30 per cent of the
undergraduates at t h e average
1 Ivy school are there en scholar-
lips Calls Athletic Aid "Swindle"
A spokesman at Columbia said
'Join tiO to 70 per cent of the un-
dergrads a r e getting some out-
side help Obviously plenty of them
are athietes and just as obvious y
mit all tif them are embryo scien-
tists out to help win the war —
het or ciid — against Russia
Earlier tins week Presidiint A
Whitney Griswold of Yale called
sehmarhips "cue of the
greatest etiucatienal swingles ever
depetrated on American youth"
dart y becaui-e some star athletes
ere lur ed to certain colleges
ivilere they took sn ij courses
Lolleen
aereed
(tvuld took a oartieularly
dim vitm of the situatina because
tlie competition with Rusia
t S
Yet pienty of literary art dra-
ricie and music stutknis a r e
riding on scholarships in the Ivy
League and eEewhere Their con-
tributions to the competitive pic-
ture Of the future aren't quite
Jew
College Ettps Some Athlees
On t h e other hand many an
inderprivileged kid with athlet c
talent has been "exposed" to a
college education he wouldn't
nave hrd otherwise If enough rub-
oei elf he developed ilito a more
useful citizen
The fielil of physical education
draws many of those athletic
scholarship grads and that's an
area that needs as much help
these days as science and engi-
neering Most Ivy schools have large en-
dowments and therefore can offer
a wide variety of scholarships but
all are based on need
"We even have something call-
- —
109 E Jackson
TO BE GIVEN FREE—DRAWING MARCH 7
flow Smith Corona Portable Typevallor
$8500 value Pius 2395 Touch Typing Course
Onst Registration per person no obligelon — -
AUTHORIZED SMITH CORONA FRANCHISE DEALER
FOR 6 COUNTIES:
Choctaw Mc Curtain A oka Pusbmataha
Pittsburg aid Latimer
4w ONMENENO Sa MEIMMO MEMMINE MM OMMIOMin inEMEIIE OMNI 11111
COMPLETE LINE OF OIFICE SUPPLIES
TYPEWRITERS ADDING MACHINES CALCULATORS MIMEOGRAPHS CASH REGISTERS
DUPLICATORS OFi--ICE FURNITURE
FTe Loan rdachine
Free
S 11175DAY MATICTI 3 1371
SPOR72113
Ir tr41 -'C o r IL vc: t h o I
1 irit 1)eor 11 t 1 tv r m-1
Lz-lie Mot a Ia: )t i cp wmh 111i 1
1 Leen autociied ily 01 1'ot'
1 m1 sh-t tv re It aj I e te t
when coohmt ory1Lst
"TennS i'l'i:—'r r i II s t th
tinte to her a- othor 1eop!e Wise !
-0Cs say pcki Let s tr Lit-me-m n"
e ad s ' itut Me 1)kLer 111:y
Xtulcstri la the Garden a icy
klays hence While he is a devoko
if Australian feothall too Bolan
eially he is doing hetkr at t h o
moment than it he had turned ou
to be a Dodger oultio!der
Because in aoh!ition to the MO
0)0 he received f o r turhing pro
the son Of a Me bourne shoo
Lacher also is swinging for $6e
top pi izk every one of the 60 di)
he goes on the court in this cur
rent tour against either Panch
j Gonzales Lew Mad at Anderson
If he lost every match he'd std
collect $:00 every time he plays
ed an honorary scholarship" said
Harry Coleman of Columbia
"Suppose a student signs a
scholarship but doesn't need the
money Ile doesn't get money but
he is listed as attending on an hon-
orary scholarship because right or
wrong in the eyes of future em-
ployers he might not he consid-
ered a bright boy if he didn't
at on a scholarship"
The Ivy League said Coleman
never did have such a thing as
an athletic scholarship and now
as always makes it awards on the
basis of need
"If a star quarterback comes
from an extremely poor family
he'll get what he needs if he
qualifies" said Coleman "But if
the same boy actually needs onlv
$100 to get through the four years
that's all he gets"
Obviously thcre a r e abuses at
some schools awarding athletic
scho:arships some perhaps coin-
ing under the heading of "educa-
tional swindles" But if a lad can
contribute something to the over-
all campus picture by his at
skills and thereby get some edu-
cation he might have plisse(' oh-
erwise what's wrong with that?"
nicitmoND Va — (UM —
Juhnny Unitas Baltimore Colts
quarte:hack arrived trve Monday
hc!p the Richmond Spiders of
the Sott1hern Cotareocc wit h
spring football practice Unitas wi
work kith the team throrh this
'Veck a n d pos reY1 w e e k
their Innl we k of prctjp
G
ET niD -
or: Ac it :-
:
ak - '' 1
4 ern A t
seldom seen always dangerous
Call
TI:o T H Rogers Lumber Co
- Representative Of
ALLIED TERMITE CONTROL
FREE
Inspection and Estimate
Bonded and Insured Pho
OPE!! FOR CIISIMSS
BALDWIN OFFICE SUPPLY
Hugo
Do not
01111MMMU
Tile Yours Lying Ropiireft
l'ck-up and De ty'ry
Rental Yachinei
1172! Ir(TO DAILY NEWS'
1
:
'
x
)
j A
(
1
: 4
!
4 - rrs0'
t 443 t 1
i
' 64
1 i "
-
!
ok 4
!
1 r 1
EARLY CASTING — Lew
liurdette had a bad World
Series last fall but he'll be
back for more this spring1
Meanwhile the Milwaukee
right-hander gets in a little
pshing at Sarasota
$20000 flew
°dens Open
Begins Today :
NEW ORLEANS — —
Some of the nation's top golfers
will compete today as a professional-amateur
event gets under-
way at the suburban Metairie
Country CI a b and qualifying
rounds begin for the $20000 New
:iricans Oren
Some 122 golfers have signed
or the qualifying rounds They
NO be fighting for the 60 avail-
able berths left in the erten Ex-
emptions from Qualifying fere
granted to 'JO top golfers
Howie ihnson fresh from his
'Sunday win the the Baton Rouge
Open will be competing in both
ev:nts Ile will be paired with
imateurs A T Higgins Jr and
kl G Rowe in the pro-am tc 0 n-
test Mier bigliame golfers slated tO
appear include Ken Venturi top
PGA molt y-wirtner Art Wait Marty-
Forgot and Dow FtnEwaid
171A117 ITUGOIE
1
Phone
Phone 164
have ta present to win
A aWMOIP-A111
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View five places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Nesbit, Gene. The Hugo Daily News (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 236, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 3, 1959, newspaper, March 3, 1959; Hugo, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2128454/m1/5/?q=la+de+mayaguez: accessed July 13, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.